AI Article Synopsis

  • The ocular vasculature, vital for visual function, consists of the central retinal and ciliary vascular systems, but its detailed formation process remains unclear.
  • Researchers studied zebrafish embryos to visualize the development of ocular vasculature, identifying key angioblast clusters as origins of blood vessels in the eye.
  • This study successfully captured the formation of primary ocular vessels, detailing how they organize and connect, thus providing new insights into the process that could enhance understanding of ocular vascular development.

Article Abstract

Ocular vasculature consists of the central retinal and ciliary vascular systems, which are essential to maintaining visual function. Many researchers have attempted to determine their origins and development; however, the detailed, stepwise process of ocular vasculature formation has not been established. In zebrafish, two angioblast clusters, the rostral and midbrain organizing centers, form almost all of the cranial vasculature, including the ocular vasculature, and these are from where the cerebral arterial and venous angioblast clusters, respectively, differentiate. In this study, we first determined the anatomical architecture of the primary ocular vasculature and then followed its path from the two cerebral angioblast clusters using a time-lapse analysis of living Tg(flk1:EGFP)k7 zebrafish embryos, in which the endothelial cells specifically expressed enhanced green fluorescent protein. We succeeded in capturing images of the primary ocular vasculature formation and were able to determine the origin of each ocular vessel. In zebrafish, the hyaloid and ciliary arterial systems first organized independently, and then anastomosed via the inner optic circle on the surface of the lens by the lateral transfer of the optic vein. Finally, the choroidal vascular plexus formed around the eyeball to complete the primary ocular vasculature formation. To our knowledge, this study is the first to report successful capture of circular integration of the optic artery and vein, lateral transfer of the optic vein to integrate the hyaloidal and superficial ocular vasculatures, and formation of the choroidal vascular plexus. Furthermore, this new morphological information enables us to assess the entire process of the primary ocular vasculature formation, which will be useful for its precise understanding.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5405983PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0176456PLOS

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